# When preparing the isothermal reaction mix, add the PEG slowly to liquid. If added too quickly it will form a plug which will make mixing difficult (KS)

# When preparing the isothermal reaction mix, add the PEG slowly to liquid. If added too quickly it will form a plug which will make mixing difficult (KS)

+

# The initial paper suggests that 10 - 100 ng of total DNA be used for assemblies. I've gone as high as 170 ng without any ill effects. (KS)

# Have successfully used for a two way and three way ligation (KS)

# Have successfully used for a two way and three way ligation (KS)

-

#There is a potential for point mutations at the DNA boundaries which has yet to be quantified. Paper suggests 1 every 50 assemblies or so so sequence to verify interfaces or leave spacers at the interfaces to 'absorb' these errors (KS)

+

# There is a potential for mutations at the DNA boundaries which has yet to be quantified. Paper suggests 1 every 50 assemblies or so. Of the two initial assemblies I made, one had a missense mutation so sequence to verify interfaces or leave spacers (~ 50 bp or so) at the interfaces to 'absorb' these errors (KS)

-

# I have used PCRs as is (with PCR cleanup only) and with gel extracted DNA. PCR Cleanup gives more colonies (more DNA, better quality (no agarose, QG contamination) but also has more false positives (PCR template plasmid). False positive could be alleviated by DpnI treatment if gel extraction is not used but I haven't tested this yet (KS).

+

# I have used PCRs as is (with PCR cleanup only) and gel extracted DNA in my assemblies. PCR cleanup gives more colonies (more DNA, better quality (no agarose/QG contamination)) but also has more false positives (PCR template plasmid). False positives may be alleviated by DpnI treatment if gel extraction is not used but I haven't tested this yet (KS).

-

# I inadvertently designed my primers with 20 bp homology and a 20 bp spacer from the adjacent fragment and still got accurate plasmids. Possible to use shorter primers if desired (KS)

+

# I once inadvertently designed my primers with 20 bp homology and a 20 bp spacer from the adjacent fragment and still got accurate plasmids. Possible to use less overlap if desired (KS)

<br />

<br />

+

==References==

==References==

<biblio>

<biblio>

#Gibson-nmeth-2009 pmid=19363495

#Gibson-nmeth-2009 pmid=19363495

+

//Isothermal assembly method

+

#Gibson-science-2008 pmid=18218864

+

//Two step thermocycled assembly variant

</biblio>

</biblio>

+

<br />

----

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[[Prather:Protocols|Back to Prather Lab Protocols]]

[[Prather:Protocols|Back to Prather Lab Protocols]]

Current revision

Contents

Gibson Chew Back And Anneal Assembly: One Step Isothermal

Gibson Chew Back and Anneal Assembly (Gibson CBA) is a quick and easy method to construct plasmids without using restriction enzymes. In this method, DNA fragments to be assembled are PCR amplified with 40 bp of overlap to the adjacent sequence (only one DNA fragment per interface needs to have an overlap extension into the adjacent fragment). These fragments are then mixed in a single pot with a single strand exonuclease to generate sticky ends and allowed to anneal before being repaired by a polymerase and a ligase. In theory, many fragments can be assembled simultaneously (5, 4 inserts + backbone, have been documented in the initial report) into a single product of up to ~100 kb+. The method has several thermocycled variants of higher efficiency but the isothermal protocol offers almost comparable yields with greater simplicity.

Method

Reagents

5x Isothermal Reaction Mix

3 ml 1 M Tris-Hcl (pH 7.5)

300 μL 1 M MgCl2

60 μL 100 mM dGTP

60 μL 100 mM dATP

60 μL 100 mM dTTP

60 μL 100 mM dCTP

300 μL 1 M DTT

1.5 g PEG-8000

300 μL 100 mM NAD

balance ddH2O

6 ml Total

Assembly Master Mix

320 μL 5X Isothermal Master Mix

0.64 μL 10 U/μL T5 exonuclease

20 μL 2 U/μL Phusion DNA Pol

0.16 μL 40 000 U/μL Taq DNA Ligase

860 μL ddH2O

1.2 ml Total

Aliquoted reaction and master mixes are stable at -20°C and can withstand several freeze thaw cycles.

Comments

When preparing the isothermal reaction mix, add the PEG slowly to liquid. If added too quickly it will form a plug which will make mixing difficult (KS)

The initial paper suggests that 10 - 100 ng of total DNA be used for assemblies. I've gone as high as 170 ng without any ill effects. (KS)

Have successfully used for a two way and three way ligation (KS)

There is a potential for mutations at the DNA boundaries which has yet to be quantified. Paper suggests 1 every 50 assemblies or so. Of the two initial assemblies I made, one had a missense mutation so sequence to verify interfaces or leave spacers (~ 50 bp or so) at the interfaces to 'absorb' these errors (KS)

I have used PCRs as is (with PCR cleanup only) and gel extracted DNA in my assemblies. PCR cleanup gives more colonies (more DNA, better quality (no agarose/QG contamination)) but also has more false positives (PCR template plasmid). False positives may be alleviated by DpnI treatment if gel extraction is not used but I haven't tested this yet (KS).

I once inadvertently designed my primers with 20 bp homology and a 20 bp spacer from the adjacent fragment and still got accurate plasmids. Possible to use less overlap if desired (KS)